Building resilient agriculture means aligning science, engineering, and policy, from smarter inputs and circular practices to infrastructure and equity. Tomorrow, Oct 29 (9:30 a.m. ET), the Cell Press Sustainability Forum convenes experts to map actionable routes to impact: • Keynote: Jason White, The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station • Panelists: Iseult Lynch (University of Birmingham), Kimberly Parker (Washington University in St. Louis), Anna Paltseva (Purdue University), Erik Mathijs (KU Leuven) • Moderators: Michelle Muzzio (Chem Circularity), Richard Thompson (Cell Reports Sustainability), Shanshan Zhang (One Earth by Cell Press) Join the live discussion—and get the recording on demand: https://hubs.li/Q03QxmKw0
About us
One Earth, published by Cell Press, is a monthly journal that features papers from the fields of natural, social, and applied sciences. One Earth is the home for high-quality research that seeks to understand and address today’s environmental Grand Challenges, publishing across the spectrum of environmental change and sustainability science. A sister journal to Cell, Chem, and Joule, One Earth aspires to break down barriers between disciplines and stimulate the cross-pollination of ideas with a platform that unites communities, fosters dialogue, and encourages transformative research.
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https://www.cell.com/one-earth/home
External link for One Earth by Cell Press
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- Periodical Publishing
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- 2-10 employees
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- Privately Held
Updates
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Online now: Networks of influence: Linking capitals and agency to understand actors’ roles in sustainability interventions http://dlvr.it/TNwyzX
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One Earth by Cell Press reposted this
🌍 New Publication Alert! Excited to share my latest work: “Networks of Influence: Linking capitals and agency to understand actors’ roles in sustainability interventions”. In this perspective, we dive deep into how diverse actors shape sustainability outcomes and why their agency matters. By bridging the concepts of agency and capitals, we explore how actors influence governance processes within broader sustainability interventions through five forms of agency: 🔹 Allocating human resources 🔹 Enacting political relevance 🔹 Influencing financial flows 🔹 Providing physical goods & assets 🔹 Steering social-ecological discourse We propose an actor-process network approach to assess agency, including a set of guiding questions you may use in your own research, and demonstrate how it can be operationalised using three exemplary case studies. The perspective helps address key gaps in understanding influence and power in sustainability initiatives and pushes forward current debates around how capitals shape sustainability transformations. 🔗 Link in the comments. This work is especially relevant for researchers and practitioners co-creating sustainability interventions or interested in understanding and navigating the roles and relationships among diverse actors. Thanks a lot to my co-authors for a very inspiring and productive process of getting this published in One Earth by Cell Press: Roman Isaac, Gesche Krause, Louis Celliers, María Dolores López Rodríguez, and Berta Martín-Lopez. Would love to hear your thoughts, questions, or reflections if this resonates with your work. Please also share within your networks of relevance. Leuphana School of Sustainability, Stockholm Resilience Centre, Climate Service Center Germany (GERICS), Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research #SustainabilityScience #Agency #EnvironmentalGovernance #NetworkAnalysis #Capitals #SocialEcologicalSystems #Transformation
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Online now: Potential expansion of wheat planting areas driven by climate warming offsets yield losses and enhances global production http://dlvr.it/TNvvxh
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One Earth by Cell Press reposted this
🌎🔄 Excited to announce the launch of Chem Circularity♻️🧪 https://lnkd.in/dqjTHcmq The journal will be Cell Press’s community-focused journal embracing the multiple disciplines coming together to develop sustainable and circular systems. The journal builds on the excellent work in the area by our flagship journals Chem by Cell Press, One Earth by Cell Press, Joule by Cell Press, and Matter by Cell Press over the past decade. Chem Circularity spotlights innovations that move toward closed-loop solutions across chemistry, engineering, materials science, biotechnology and beyond. We hope to connect academia, industry, and government to drive advances in reduction, redesign, reuse, recycling, and responsible production and consumption. If you’re tackling challenges in waste valorization, renewable feedstocks, resource recovery, redesign of materials or processes with an eye to resources, life cycle assessment, or circular systems—this journal could be a home for your work! 🚀 We welcome research, reviews, perspectives, and commentaries, as well as a new article type called ‘Closing the Loop’. Across the journal, we hope that we will be able to span all stages of a product’s life cycle. Join us as we build a global community committed to circularity. 🌱 #CircularChemistry #Sustainability #Engineering #Research #CircularEconomy #ChemCircularity
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We’re bringing together leading voices to connect technology + practice for resilient, circular agriculture (Oct 29, 9:30 a.m. ET): • Jason White (Keynote), The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station • Iseult Lynch, University of Birmingham • Kimberly Parker, Washington University in St. Louis • Anna Paltseva, Purdue University • Erik Mathijs, KU Leuven Guiding the discussion: Michelle Muzzio (Chem Circularity), Richard Thompson (Cell Reports Sustainability), Shanshan Zhang (One Earth by Cell Press) Topics: fertilizers & pesticides, soil health, water scarcity, engineering breakthroughs, and equitable policy pathways. Register to join live. https://hubs.li/Q03Q06TF0
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One Earth by Cell Press reposted this
Very happy to share our latest paper in One Earth by Cell Press titled “Material price surges threaten an equitable and timely renewable energy transition”. Thanks for the support from Kuishuang Feng, Michael Goodsite, and all collaborators! Rapid expansion of solar and wind power is essential to meet the Paris Agreement climate goals. However, these technologies rely heavily on #criticalMaterials such as copper and rare-earth metals. But as global demand of materials surges along net-zero pathways — and as supply chains face geopolitical and environmental shocks — their #prices will likely climbing to unprecedented levels, creating uncertainty that could hinder timely climate action. What if these material #pricesurges themselves become the next bottleneck for climate action? We still lack of understanding of the long-term magnitude and cross-country distribution of the price impacts. Integrating nine material price dynamics into a global assessment model, we quantify how soaring input costs could reshape the pace and geography of renewable deployment. we find a potential 13% delay in solar and wind deployment and an additional >$200 billion in annual costs. Solar power faces greater disruption due to higher material reliance, exacerbating disparities in solar-rich but economically vulnerable Global South countries. Our findings offer science-based evidence to guide policymakers and industry leaders, underscoring how coordinated governance and technological innovation can safeguard both climate targets and global equity by mitigating future material price risks. The highlights are: 🔹 Material price surge could delay the rollout of solar and windby around ten years! 🔹 Over $200 billion additional deployment costs would be required. 🔹 Developing countries (especially the Global-South) face the greatest deployment delays and cost burdens. 🔹 Technical innovations and cooperative strategies can mitigate material price risks More can be found in: https://lnkd.in/gZT5GhWf #CriticalMaterials #SupplyChainRisk #MaterialPrice #EnergyEconomics #GlobalSouth #ClimateEquity #SustainableInnovation #EnergyTransition #RenewableEnergy #NetZero #Solardeployment #MateiralSupplyRisk
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One Earth by Cell Press reposted this
I’m deeply honored to have been invited by the committee of the Cell Press Symposium: Chemical Solutions for a Sustainable Plastics Future to present a keynote last week on the fate and impact of #microplastics. My sincere thanks to the organizing team, speakers and all the participants of this meeting for such an impactful program and lively discussions. I really enjoyed the wide diversity of perspectives from around the world and different disciplines (behavioral psychology, chemistry, environmental science, polymer chemistry, chemical engineering, and more). I will have to visit Amsterdam again sometime as well! And thanks for spotlighting our publication One Earth by Cell Press during this meeting on the Impact of the Plastics Life Cycle https://lnkd.in/eN8BE4Vb
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With the Paris Agreement’s 1.5°C limit breached in 2024, urban decarbonization is more urgent than ever. Cities account for 75% of CO₂ emissions, making municipal action essential to climate progress. Ahead of COP30, join us tomorrow for Urban decarbonization: Priorities for COP30, October 22 at 9:30 a.m. ET, featuring: Keynote: Angel Hsu, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Panelists: Joan Fitzgerald, Ayyoob Sharifi, James Evans Moderators: Lewis Collins, Camilla Imarisio, Abigail Kelly, Melissa Plail Together, we’ll explore city & corporate pledges, equity in decarbonization, and the role of urban planning in sustainable futures. Register now: https://hubs.li/Q03Pt1nQ0
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